By Jane Wester | May 10, 2022
Federal legislation to toughen judges' financial disclosure requirements recently passed both houses of Congress.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Julian D. Ehrlich | May 5, 2022
This discussion will examine how unfolding case law since 'Burlington' has delved ever deeper into the nature of causation and most recently led to a new body of law interpreting the effect of third-party pleadings on AI coverage.
By Brian Lee | May 3, 2022
The bill, dubbed the "Grieving Families Act," would modernize a New York law enacted in the mid-19th century and include close family members such as domestic partners, as well as address a "harsh anomaly."
By Brian Lee | May 2, 2022
The legal battle stems from the state's decision in 2011 to reduce its premium contributions under an optional health-benefit plan for active and retired state employees.
By Jane Wester | April 22, 2022
The three-judge panel said a Department of Health & Human Services rule aligned with plaintiffs' argument over who should pay for medications, but it did not apply retroactively, thus denying her relief.
By Jane Wester | April 20, 2022
Attorneys representing the medical professionals named as policyholders on the insurance policies argued that the money should go to their clients.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Russell Yankwitt and Scott Wenzel | April 20, 2022
A discussion of the new CIDA, signed into law on Dec. 31, 2021, by Governor Hochul, which overhauls CPLR 3101(f) and places significant burdens on defendants to proactively provide to plaintiffs certain insurance information and documentation. While the CIDA as amended is more palatable to defendants, it still marks a significant change in insurance disclosures that defendants in New York state actions are required to make.
By ALM Staff | April 7, 2022
This suit was surfaced by Law.com Radar. Read the complaint here.
By Brian Lee | March 31, 2022
One key backer of the measure suggested that making insurance companies responsible for childhood lead poisoning would do little to raise premiums. But that view was not universally shared.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Howard B. Epstein and Theodore A. Keyes | March 29, 2022
In their Corporate Insurance Law column, Howard Epstein and Theodore Keyes discuss the new disclosure obligations imposed by the Comprehensive Insurance Disclosure Act, the modifications to the original version of the Act, which scaled back some requirements, as well as some issues and concerns posed by the new disclosure obligations.
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